A silvery-gray conger
eel had already gone limp by the time fishermen found it on their
trawler, but its shocking length of 7 feet (2.1 meters) still caught
them off guard, according to the British company that found the huge
eel.
Fishermen mistakenly snagged the blue-eyed eel
yesterday (May 14) off the southwestern coast of the United Kingdom. At
the time, they were trawling the area (i.e., dragging nets to catch
fish) on an inshore trawler named Hope. The conger eel got stuck in the
nets, and was already dead by the time the fishermen hauled it aboard,
according to the company, Plymouth Fisheries.
Immediately, the fishermen were impressed by its length. [Photos: The Freakiest-Looking Fish]
"I was stunned because it was so huge," Scott Govier, a commercial fisherman with Plymouth Fisheries, told the U.K. tabloid the Daily Express. "It was already dead when we pulled it up, else we would have thrown him back in and let him live."
In fact, the eel narrowly missed setting a U.K. record. Once gutted, it
weighed 131 lbs. (59 kilograms), just shy of the 133.25-lb. (60.44 kg)
record for a rod-caught conger eel.
Before it was gutted, the eel likely weighed between 155 and 160 lbs. (70 kg to 73 kg), Plymouth Fisheries said.
"Conger does not have a
great deal of commercial value today, as prices have dropped. But this
was an impressive fish, and a catch to make any angler's day," Pete
Bromley, manager of Plymouth Fisheries, said in a statement.Typically,
conger eels are inexpensive, but the massive catch brought in about 40
British pounds (about $63) when it was sold at an auction in Plymouth,
the company said.
"Conger move to very deep water and die after spawning,
so like all large congers caught off the Southwest Approaches [the
waters off the U.K.'s southwestern coast], this fish is likely to be an
unspawned female," he added.
Conger eels are typically found hiding among the Southwest's many
wrecks, or on reefs and rocky ground, "but they do venture out to open
ground in search of food, usually during neap tides or slack water,"
Bromley said. However, "despite their size and power, they are not very
strong swimmers," he added.
A photo the company posted on Twitter
initially made the fish look much longer than 7 feet, but two
additional photos — including one comparing the conger eel to a man
holding another eel, and another of the fish on a pallet — later
provided a better perspective.
"The chap standing next to it is around 5 foot, 7 inches [1.7 m] tall,
and we estimated the conger eel to be around 7 feet in length," Bromley
said. "Our second photo showing it lying on a pallet also makes this
clear, as this pallet is only 1 meter by 1.2 meters [3.2 feet by 3.9
feet] in size."
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